jcb wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 2:50 am
(1) Do "street" and "avenue" signify something else that I'm not aware of? (Maybe the width of the road?)
Yes, avenues are typically bigger than streets. In downtown DC, streets follow a grid system except when they don't and avenues are at angles to it and lead to the White House except for the ones that don't.
(2) How do you navigate when every street has a name name instead of a number name?
By living there, using landmarks, etc. Street names can be useful for giving directions to people who don't know the area but landmarks are more useful for people who do. Main roads are known by either street name or number - for example, Maryland has Rockville Pike, which I'm sure has a number but I don't know it, and Route 1, which I'm sure has at least one name but I don't know it. Virginia has Braddock Road (would be a major thoroughfare except it's parallel to several others) and Route 29.
Apparently Route 1 is called Baltimore Ave at some points and Washington Blvd at others, which is a common naming convention for roads that connect two cities, for a surprisingly loose definition of city - between Wise, VA (pop. ~3200) and the city of Norton (pop. ~3600, the smallest city in Virginia, apparently named after the head of a now-defunct railroad company in a failed bid to convince them to build a depot there which sounds about right for Virginia, miserable state tbh) there's Wise-Norton Road.
Phones try their best to use numbers for the roads everyone uses names for and vice versa.
(3) How many of the streets with name names (elm, johnson, etc) do you actually know (name and location relative to each other) off the top of your head?
Most that I've ever taken regularly by car.
(4) Am I overestimating how useful logical road names are in the modern internet era? After all, I can't remember the last time I drove to a new place where I didn't look it up on Google Maps first. (Furthermore, people who drive with a GPS in their car have even less need to have logical street names, because the GPS handles all the navigation for them.)
I've never been to a city where the "logical" road names were logical enough to matter. New York doesn't count unless you're in Manhattan north of 14th and ignoring Broadway.
(5) If you're old enough to have driven in the pre-internet era, was it more cumbersome in the past?
If you didn't know the way, you had to use paper maps.
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